• Bird Feeders,  Uncategorized

    It Sarts Tomorrow!

    Cornell Lab of Ornithology
    February 11, 2010

    Great Backyard Bird Count Begins Tomorrow!

    Join the 13th annual Great Backyard Bird Count by tallying the birds you see at any location during February 12-15. Watch for at least 15 minutes on one or more count days, record the highest number of each species you see at any one time, and enter your checklist at birdcount.org. Put your sightings on the map and watch as counts pour in from around the United States and Canada! The count is led by the Cornell Lab, Audubon, and Canadian partner Bird Studies Canada, with sponsorship from Wild Birds Unlimited. Learn more at birdcount.org.

    Sneak Peek: “We Love Birds” Community Website

    The Natural Resources Defense Council and the Cornell Lab are getting ready to launch an interactive online community for bird enthusiasts at WeLoveBirds.org. We invite you to preview the site today, become a community member, and invite your friends, too. The site provides a place for conservation-minded bird watchers to connect with one another about the issues they care about. Visit WeLoveBirds.org.

    Birds That Sound Like Kazoos

    On an island in the Indian Ocean, recordist Jon Erickson recorded White-tailed Tropicbirds and the “kazoo operas” performed by Wedge-tailed Shearwaters. Learn more and hear these unusual sounds by visiting Round Robin, the Cornell Blog of Ornithology. For more unusual sounds, try the Herald Petrel’s “burbling spaceship” call.

    Top 5 Tips for “iPhoneiscoping”

    When you see a great bird, don’t miss a chance to take home a snapshot—by using your cell phone and your binoculars or scope. Charles Eldermire, manager of the Cornell Lab’s visitor center, shares some of his pics and his top tips for getting started. Go.

    Watching Crows: More Than Meets the Eye

    Crows are family birds, sometimes living in groups with extended family members or even “adopting” the kids of unrelated neighbors. Find out how to watch for clues throughout the seasons to tell you what their antics mean. Learn more.

    Find Out What this Weird and Wonderful Bird Has in Common with Your Backyard Birds

    What’s round, black-and-electric blue, bounces and snaps, and is loved by the ladies? It’s a male Superb Bird-of-Paradise doing its courtship display. No one looking at just their feathers would ever predict the bizarre and elaborate dance males in this family do to attract mates. (If your browser didn’t load the photo, view our web version—this picture is not to be missed!) Take the Cornell Lab’s online course on Courtship and Rivalry to learn just how weird these birds are—and how much they have in common with familiar ones in your own backyard. For a preview of the course, visit birds.cornell.edu/courses. The next course begins February 17.

    Ornithologists’ Meeting Begins with the Question of Bird Flight

    San Diego is the place for ornithologists to be this week, as a joint meeting gets underway for the Cooper Ornithological Society, American Ornithologists’ Union, and Society of Canadian Ornithologists. Living Bird editor Tim Gallagher just sent in a blog post from the scene, describing Monday’s plenary talk by the University of Montana’s Ken Dial. Over the past decade, Dial and his collaborators have proposed a surprising new theory about how birds first began to fly. Read more.

    Can’t get enough bird info?

    Explore www.AllAboutBirds.org.

    Photo credits: Eastern Bluebird by Glenda Simmons, GBBC photo contest winner 2009; iPhoniscoped photos by Charles Eldermire; Jon Erickson recording White-tailed Tropicbirds, courtesy of Jon Erickson; American Crows by Ross Michaels; Superb Bird-of-Paradise by Edwin Scholes, III; White-crowned Sparrow in sidebar by Red-Star.

    A Valentine’s Gift for Bird Lovers

    Do you know someone who loves birds? Send a Valentine’s present that enriches their enjoyment of bird watching: A gift membership in the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Members receive our beautiful Living Bird magazine, informative BirdScope newsletter, and discounts on courses and citizen-science projects. It’s a meaningful gift that supports your loved one’s passion for bird watching and for helping in the study and protection of birds.

    Give a gift membership today.

    More Ways to Get Involved:

    1. While you’re waiting for spring, help us sort and tag our 8 million archived NestCam images. Participants have already tagged more than 1 million images. Visit CamClickr.

    2. Look out for Rusty Blackbirds! Their numbers have plummeted by 88-98% over the last few decades. Visit our web page to learn which states are in the Rusty Blackbird’s range, and report your sightings in the Rusty Blackbird Blitz.

    3. Thanks to the generosity of bird photographers everywhere, the Birdshare Flickr group has surpassed more than 30,000 images! We feature many of these images on our websites. Add your photos or enjoy the abundance of beautiful bird photos at Birdshare.

    Your support of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology helps us solve critical problems facing birds and other wildlife by using the best science and technology–and by inspiring people of all ages and backgrounds to care about and protect the planet. Please join as a member or make a donation to support our mission.
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    Cornell Lab of Ornithology
    159 Sapsucker Woods Rd, Ithaca NY 14850
    Questions or Comments?
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  • Bird Accessories,  Specialty Bird Foods,  Uncategorized

    Ducks and Meal Worms?

    While walking the dog at a local park last week I decided to feed the ducks as the weather was blustery cold. I know they’re sick of bread because that’s what everyone feeds them. Some cracked corn borrowed from the squirrels would work, but it seemed they need a little something with more substance. Suet? nah…might not be so good for them. I decided to borrow from the bluebird stash and grabbed some meal worms. The ducks loved them! It might be their favorite as I don’t believe any other duck feeder uses them at this park.

    Meal worms were the trick that got bluebirds nesting in my yard last spring. With two successful broods I realized I was going to be buying worms as a staple now. The heated baths is what keeps them during freezing winter temperatures.

    Easy to keep – the meal worms live in a container in the fridge with some wheat bran for bedding. What I failed to realize is your supposed to feed the worms too! With a horse, a dog, and five cats I’m thinking: feed the meal worms??????

  • Bird Accessories,  Bird Feeders,  Squirrel Proof Bird Feeders

    The Great Backyard Bird Count Info

    Project FeederWatch Electronic Newsletter

    February 8, 2010

    If you are counting for Project FeederWatch from February 12 through 15, your counts can do double duty if you enter the same tallies into the web site for the 13th annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC).
    It’s a step well worth taking to make sure the GBBC database includes your information and collects as many observations as possible. After you enter your checklists on the GBBC website, take a few moments to explore reports coming in from across the continent and upload images for the photo contest. Tweet about the birds you’re seeing and  by including the #gbbc hashtag, your comments will appear in the Twitter widget on the GBBC home page. Just by participating in the GBBC you’ll be entered into a drawing for great prizes. The GBBC is a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society with new Canadian partner, Bird Studies Canada and sponsorship from Wild Birds Unlimited
    The rules for counting for the GBBC are a little different than for FeederWatch. For the GBBC you can report any birds you see at your wild bird feeders, even those birds flying overhead that don’t count for FeederWatch. You can also submit a separate checklist for each locale on every day that you count.

    Join the Great Backyard Bird Count this year and Count for Fun, Count for the Future!

    Evening Grosbeak by Ted Schroeder, 2009 GBBC.

    * * * * * *

    Project FeederWatch Contact Information

    For US participants:
    Cornell Lab of Ornithology
    Project FeederWatch
    159 Sapsucker Woods Rd., Ithaca, NY 14850
    (607) 254-2427
    [email protected]
    http://birds.cornell.edu/pfw

    For Canadian participants:
    Bird Studies Canada/Etudes d’Oiseaux Canada P.O. Box 160 Port Rowan, ON N0E 1M0
    (519) 586-3531
    [email protected]
    Toll Free: 1-888-448-BIRD (2473)
    http://www.bsc-eoc.org/national/pfw.html

    Project FeederWatch is a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Bird Studies Canada.

    The Cornell Lab of Ornithology is a nonprofit organization supported by friends and members. Our mission is to interpret and conserve the earth’s biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused on birds. Watch our video about how you can join us as a “force for nature!”